Author Topic: Two 14yr-olds dead *Update*  (Read 21878 times)

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Offline Anonymous

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Two 14yr-olds dead *Update*
« Reply #15 on: February 11, 2006, 11:05:00 PM »
Looks like the pressure is working.  The tape is likely to be released soon...
In a statement on Friday, Tunnell said he is considering releasing the video with the images of other juveniles digitally obscured because of comments made by the legislators who viewed it. "The premature disclosure as reported in the press has skewed this normal process," he said. "We now fear that public perception will be based on hearsay rather than reality." He called the legislators' comments "premature at best" and "irresponsible at worst." [/b]



http://www.bradenton.com/mld/bradenton/ ... 849637.htm

Parents demand answers in son's boot camp death

MELISSA NELSON
Associated Press

PANAMA CITY, Fla. - Martin Lee Anderson played basketball and hung out with other kids in this hardscrabble neighborhood of barred windows and attack dogs that surrounds the cemetery where he was buried last month.

He made the honor roll last year and had not been in serious trouble before he and four cousins were arrested last June for taking their grandmother's Jeep Cherokee from a church parking lot and crashing it.

Although 14-year-old Anderson wasn't the driver, he was charged with grand theft. Other problems followed, including suspension from school and an arrest for trespassing.

On Jan. 5, he was admited to the Bay County Sheriff's Office Boot Camp. Two South Florida legislators who have seen a video tape of his last conscious moments say he was brutally beaten by guards who kicked and punched him.
Anderson's death has led some state leaders to demand changes at Florida's military-style boot camps.

Rep. Gus Barreiro, R-Miami Beach, who viewed the video last week said it shows a brutal beating.
"Even toward the end of the videotape, where you could just see there was pretty much nothing left of Martin, they came out with a couple of cups of water and splashed him in the face," Barreiro said.

"When you see stuff like that you just want to go through the TV and say, 'Enough is enough. Please stop hitting this kid," he said.

Rep. Dan Gelber, D-Miami Beach, a former federal prosecutor, also expressed outrage after viewing the tape, and said he did not think there was any question that excessive force was used.

Bay County Sheriff Frank McKeithen released a statement calling Barreiro and Gelber "loose cannon politicians," and said the two made "irresponsible premature and incorrect statements."

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement has said Barreiro and Gelber were allowed to view the tape because they serve on the Criminal Justice Appropriations Committee. Several members of Gov. Jeb Bush's staff also were allowed to view the tape.

But Anderson's parents, Gina Jones and Robert Anderson, have not been allowed to see the last conscious moments of their son's life.
"No human being on this earth should go through what my son went though. I just wish they could have done me like that instead of it being him," Robert Anderson said.

Anderson's family wants the video of his admission to the camp made public, but FDLE has refused to release the tape, saying it is part of the ongoing investigation.  "I feel I need to see it. I feel I should be the one to see it," Anderson said.

The highly rated Bay County program for juvenile offenders was developed by Florida Department of Law Enforcement Commissioner Guy M. Tunnell when he was Bay County sheriff.

In a statement on Friday, Tunnell said he is considering releasing the video with the images of other juveniles digitally obscured because of comments made by the legislators who viewed it.  "The premature disclosure as reported in the press has skewed this normal process," he said. "We now fear that public perception will be based on hearsay rather than reality."  He called the legislators' comments "premature at best" and "irresponsible at worst."

Jones recalled dropping her son off at the camp, when he said he would do whatever it took to succeed.  She said she will always regret promising him as they parted that things would be OK for the next six months.  "What was my baby thinking when he was down on the ground and they were doing those things to him? Was he thinking that 'my mom said it would be OK' when they had their knees in his back?" Jones said.

The Bay County Sheriff's Office has said Anderson collapsed after he was restrained by guards while doing push ups and other exercises that were part his admission to the camp.  The medical examiner for Bay County is awaiting toxicology reports before releasing his findings. He has said trauma did not appear to be the cause of death.

In several news conferences since her son's death Jones has appeared holding pictures of him smiling or playing basketball. Last week, she carried a picture of him laying in a coffin in a suit.

"This is my baby the day before his 15th birthday," she said weeping.  She said doctors told her that her son's kidneys and liver were too badly damaged from what happened to him at the camp to be donated.  Anderson told The Associated Press that he is dealing with his son's death by keeping his anger under tight control.  "There is so much I want to say but I know it wouldn't be good right now," he said, standing on the street in front of his home, which is just a block a way from the cemetery where his son is buried.  Jones lives in the same neighborhood several blocks away and her mother also lives nearby. Martin Anderson lived with his mother.  Anderson works for a moving company and said he had talked with his son about his plans to get his own truck and have his son ride along with him. He said the boy was excited about the plan.  "Now he'll be with me in spirit only," he said.  Anderson walks over to the cemetery every day and looks at the collection of plastic flowers and dried roses that cover his son's still unmarked grave.  Jones said she tries to show her anger when she talks about her son in public, but when she's alone she remembers her last moments with him and she cries.
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Offline Anonymous

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Two 14yr-olds dead *Update*
« Reply #16 on: February 11, 2006, 11:25:00 PM »
ABC affiliate in Jax has a video report.    Unfortunately not THE video, but their report.
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Offline Anonymous

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Two 14yr-olds dead *Update*
« Reply #17 on: February 11, 2006, 11:46:00 PM »
BACKGROUND OF GUARDS, NURSE

The Bay County Sheriff's Office has released the identities and some documents on seven guards and the nurse involved in the Martin Anderson incident. The 14-year-old boy died hours after an altercation with guards at the juvenile boot camp run by the sheriff's office in Panama City. The files of those involved are incomplete in some parts and conflict with other official accounts.

? Henry L. McFadden, 32, was hired in November 2004 as an entry-level drill instructor. One of the newest hires, his file is sparse, peppered with a few comments about his responsibility and good decision-making abilities. Prior to working at the camp, he racked up a host of medals in the Air Force from 1993 to 2004.

? Charles Steven Enfinger, 32, was hired in May 2003 as an entry-level drill instructor. He was an employee of the month in May 2004 and has consistently earned sparkling reviews as one who ''stays on schedule and motivates the offenders well.'' In his file, though, the sheriff's office blacked out a paragraph concerning his crime history. A car enthusiast and hunter, he noted in his file that he restored a 1970 Chevrolet Chevelle and has ``harvested a few very respectful whitetail deer.''

? Patrick Tate Garrett, 29, was hired in February 2000 as an entry-level drill instructor. He was employee of the month in June 2004 and has good reviews but was twice suspended without pay for a day for incidents that are not spelled out in his file. Garrett was commended for performing the Heimlich maneuver to save a choking inmate. He served in the Army from 1996-1999 and was honorably discharged. Though it's not in his file, The Herald has learned he was suspended for three days in 2004 for not seeking medical attention for a youth who accused him of smashing his face into the ground.

? Joseph Lawrence Walsh, 34, was hired as an entry-level drill instructor in May 2002. He was employee of the month in February 2004 and September 2005. He earned solid reviews from superiors and was described as ''cool, calm, low key'' by a friend in a recommendation. He served in the Air Force from 1989 until 1998, when he was honorably discharged.

? Henry Leslie Dickens, 59, has worked at the boot camp since 1995 and holds the rank of administrative drill instructor. He was commended for working yearly at the Martin Luther King Community Center, and once received a personal letter from a former inmate who thanked him and two other drill instructors for putting him on the right track. In March 2001, he was reprimanded for letting a civilian use his badge. He served in the Navy from 1987-1995 and was honorably discharged.

? Charles William Helms, 50, is an upper-level drill instructor who was hired in December 1993. In 1998, then-Bay County Sheriff Guy Tunnell called him a ''great asset'' in a letter of commendation. He was employee of the month in February 2003. In October 1997, he was reprimanded for sloppy police work in connection with a kidnapping investigation, and was suspended for five days without pay in April 2005 in an apparent dispute with his supervisor. He served in the Army from June 1975 until December 1993 and was honorably discharged.

? Raymond Morris Hauck, 47, was hired in 1995 as an entry-level drill instructor. His file is full of praise from supervisors and he was employee of the month in May 2001. Hauck and two others were commended for helping Panama City fire crews help people avoid injury when their house burned across the street from the boot camp.

? Kristin Anne Doward Schmidt, 52, was hired in June 1994 as the boot camp nurse and has repeatedly won merit raises. In one review, a supervisor noted that ``if a mistake is made, she will accept it, and corrections are normally made immediately. This helps with the little things turning into big things.''
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Offline Anonymous

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Two 14yr-olds dead *Update*
« Reply #18 on: February 11, 2006, 11:47:00 PM »
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Anonymous

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Two 14yr-olds dead *Update*
« Reply #19 on: February 12, 2006, 03:18:00 AM »
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/13844383.htm

Posted on Sun, Feb. 12, 2006

It's old news that boot camps are bad news
BY FRED GRIMM [email protected]

Nothing about the sadistic abuse that boot camp guards heaped on Martin Lee Anderson should shock anyone.  Kicking, punching, choking. We already knew all about that stuff. Not even the pummeling of the 14-year-old boy after he had collapsed into unconsciousness was so surprising.

Nor was the utter indifference of the boot camp nurse who watched the brutality unfold without intervening.

The novelty here was that this kid lasted only three horrific hours at the Bay County Sheriff's Office Boot Camp. Then he died. That's the news. Not that kids in these programs are getting the hell beat out of them.

OLD STORY RESURRECTED
We all know what boot camps are about: gross intimidation, physical abuse and cruelty visited upon children. The cruelty suffered by Martin Lee Anderson at the boot camp in Panama City only resurrected an old story.
The fad to consign juvenile offenders to military-style boot camps started a dozen years ago and quickly spread to 27 states. And the reports that came out of these experiments had a numbing sameness. The camps nurtured sadistic guards and horrible abuse while 65 to 75 percent of its inmates were back in trouble within a year.
Georgia was among the first states to consign juvenile offenders to boot camps in 1990 and by the end of the decade, the U.S. Department of Justice had brought civil rights charges. The feds cataloged beatings, kickings, chokings -- oh, you can guess the details. Georgia closed the camps in 1999.

OTHERS ABANDON CAMPS
North Dakota, Colorado and Arizona abandoned boot camps after mounting allegations of abused kids were measured against miserable recidivism rates.
A series of shocking stories by the Baltimore Sun prompted Maryland to shutter its boot camps in 1999.
Stories that were shocking in 1999 can't be all that shocking in 2006. It can hardly be a surprise to officials in Tallahassee that the state's six juvenile detention boot camps are hell holes. Just across town, Aaron McNeece, the dean of Florida State University's College of Social Work, has studied the camps and told state officials and legislators that these programs were dangerous failures.

`WASTE OF MONEY'
''Everybody knows that they're a waste of time and money. Still, they keep going,'' he said.
Not even the death in Bay County, accompanied by videotaped evidence of horrific abuse, has prompted the Department of Juvenile Justice to cancel the boot camp's contract. ''The first story about this ran Jan. 7,'' said Judge Frank Orlando, who runs a youth law think-tank at Nova Southeastern University. ``The fact that this place is still open tells you how dysfunctional this state agency is.''

SHERIFFS' POLITICAL MUSCLE
Political power explains why boot camps thrive -- Florida's six camps are run by county sheriffs. ''They don't know the first thing about rehabilitation. But they know how to mess kids up in these boot camps,'' said Judge Orlando.
But sheriffs wield political clout. They managed, even while taking state operating funds, to keep their camps exempted from safeguards required for other juvenile lockups.
Besides, the public loves the notion of boot camps. We love TV news clips of rowdy kids lined up like Marines, getting the discipline we're so sure is all they need to right their lives.
Boot camps provides politicians with props for the 11 o'clock news, ''visible solutions to a serious social problem,'' McNeece call them. ``Whether they work or not is irrelevant.''
Martin Lee Anderson was incarcerated for taking his granny's car on a reckless joyride.
Here in Florida, despite a dozen years' worth of evidence to the contrary, we calculated that all the kid needed was brutal discipline and a dose of tough love.

We tough-loved Martin to death.
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Offline Anonymous

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Two 14yr-olds dead *Update*
« Reply #20 on: February 12, 2006, 10:50:00 AM »
Read the background of this kid.  Its so sad.  He was a good kid, doing well and was killed for joyriding in grandma's car.  Will people ever learn?



http://www.sptimes.com/2006/02/12/State ... nce_.shtml

Teen lost his chance to finish turnaround

A teenager sentenced to boot camp was thriving at school, respectful at work, and - before the joyride - finally on track.

By ABBIE VANSICKLE and ALEX LEARY
Published February 12, 2006

--------------------------------------------------
PANAMA CITY - Martin Lee Anderson struggled at school, so his parents sent him to the Emerald Bay Academy, a school that specializes in underperforming kids.

Martin thrived. He excelled at math. He won a leadership award. He bested his classmates at chess.

"He was a well-liked young man," principal Joe Bullock said. "He did not create problems or disruptions in class."

But just as everything finally seemed to be going right, Martin's young life fell apart.

Martin was charged with grand theft after he and a few friends took his grandmother's car on a joyride.

On Jan. 5, the 14-year-old Panama City teen collapsed during his first day at a boot camp run by the Bay County Sheriff's Office and the state Department of Juvenile Justice. He died at a Pensacola hospital.

Martin's death has brought attention to Juvenile Justice's boot camps and provided critics a prime example of what they consider the system's failings.

Last week, two legislators claimed that a video of Martin's final hours shows several drill instructors beating him in the boot camp's yard. The tape, which has not yet been made available to the public or Martin's family, so infuriated state Rep. Gus Barreiro, R-Miami Beach, that he compared it to the Rodney King beating.

That comparison angered Bay County Sheriff Frank McKeithen, who called the legislators "loose cannons" who had done nothing but "add fuel to an already volatile situation."

* * *

Martin was born to Rober t Anderson and Gina Jones on Jan. 15, 1991. He lived in a tidy yellow house with green trim on Seventh Street with his mother and his sister, 13-year-old Startavia. His father and other family lived nearby.

Martin grew into a lanky teen who loved basketball, Archie comic books and Xbox. He never lacked for friends and was a leader among the neighborhood youth and at school. He wanted to play basketball and go to college, his parents say. He told his father he would like to drive a truck.

A poster of rapper Lil' Wayne is taped to his bedroom door. A phone next to his bunk bed still has his voice on the answering machine. A framed letter from a class assignment in November sits near one wall.

"I am like a shining star in the world," it reads in his tight, small cursive.

Martin begged his mother to let him get a part-time job at a Burger King in a convenience store on 23rd Street. He had wanted to earn extra money for shoes, a cell phone and to buy pizza and hot wings, she said. She relented, letting him work a few days a week.

"He worked harder than I've ever seen any 14-year-old do," said co-worker Debra Adams, 40. Martin often worked the early morning shift on weekends, something a less responsible teen couldn't have handled, she said. He regularly started those shifts between 7 and 8 a.m., she said.

He treated customers and employees with respect, addressing them as "Miss" and "Mister."

The idea of Martin acting up at the boot camp doesn't sit right with Adams. "I just can't see why they would have to restrain Martin," she said.

"He might have made one mistake, but he didn't deserve to die," she said.

That mistake was swiping his grandmother's car in June during church. While she sat near the front of the sanctuary, Martin, his sister and several friends slipped out of church and drove off. Their escapade ended when the car struck a pole.

Several months later, Martin broke his court-imposed curfew, and a judge ordered him to a boot camp, Jones said.

The family chose the local boot camp because it was only a few minutes' drive from their home. Shortly before he started his assignment, Martin and his mother met with a drill instructor. That's when Jones began to get a bad feeling, she said.

The instructor accused her son of being a gang member, she said.

"He said, "When you come in my house, you're on my rules,"' recalled Jones, 36.

On the day she dropped him off at the camp, they shared a final embrace. "He said, "I love you,' and the way he said it, he knew something,"' Jones said.

The next time she saw Martin, he was in the hospital. Blood was running from his nose, and it looked broken, she said. His body had swollen so much that the 140-pound boy looked about 300 pounds, his father said.

Jones said the family wanted to donate his organs, but they were told they were too damaged.

"Certainly, the family believes there was trauma," said the family's attorney, Benjamin Crump of Tallahassee.

Just what happened in the hours Martin spent at the boot camp, a single-story brick compound enclosed in a razor-wire topped fence, isn't yet clear.

Typically, a new arrival undergoes an evaluation by a nurse, a physical fitness assessment and an introduction to behavioral expectations by drill instructors, according to sheriff's spokeswoman Ruth Sasser. Some drill instructors are sworn law enforcement officers, she said, but it's not a requirement for the job. The exercise requirements and procedures are nothing out of the ordinary, Sasser said.

"It's very typical of any boot camp," she said.

That may be the problem, said Barreiro.

* * *

Boot camps arose in the mid 1980s as tough-on-crime attitudes swept national politics. In 1987, as Florida prisons began to overflow, then-Gov. Bob Martinez signed a bill creating the camps. The first one opened in Manatee County in 1993. Boys in blue prison uniforms ran obstacle courses, marched in the sun and shouted chants.

"I used to live a life of crime. Now I'm doing boot camp time," one went.

But critics arose almost immediately, wondering if the flashy salutes, shiny shoes and dozens of push-ups in the dirt could reform young criminals. One scoffed that all it would produce was a "well-conditioned mugger."

By 1995, lawmakers were revisiting the idea in light of poor performance reports. One study found three out of four recruits at the Manatee camp were re-arrested within a year of release. Another study in 1998 found 87 percent of graduates from Broward County's now-defunct camp had been re-arrested. Today, five boot camps exist in Bay, Manatee, Martin, Pinellas and Polk counties, serving 197 youths. They must stay for at least four months, but most stay six.

Barreiro has emerged as the most vocal critic, arguing that camps are failures built on intimidation and abuse. One of his central points is that recent reforms in Florida calling for less aggressive tactics with youthful offenders did not apply to boot camps.

"The DJJ has known for years that boot camps didn't have to meet the same standards," he said. "Why does it take a death to show that's a problem?"

Barreiro called for their end after Martin's death in January but it was not until the video became known that his cause took hold, drawing national media attention.

"They are dangerous, they don't change behavior and they cost a lot of money," he said.

There has been one other death at a Florida camp. In 1998, 16-year-old Chad Franza hanged himself at the Polk County facility. His parents won settlements from the county, the Department of Juvenile Justice and the camp's private health care provider.

Though advocates still back the camps, additional research and recidivism studies aid Barreiro. The Department of Juvenile Justice's records show that 62 percent of graduates are re-arrested, a rate experts call high.

"They're simply not effective," said Aaron McNeese, a Florida State University dean who has studied boot camps. "Everybody equates boot camp with getting tough. Whether it works or not, it looks good."

Backed by the video, Barreiro heads with confidence into Wednesday's meeting of the House Criminal Justice Appropriations Committee. He scheduled a workshop to discuss the camps and whether they deserve continued funding.

It promises to be a heated meeting. One former sheriff, Pinellas' Everett Rice, is now a lawmaker on the committee. Stressing he had not seen the video, Rice said, "I don't think we should throw everything out just because of one incident. I think they have been successful programs."

Perhaps a greater obstacle is Barreiro's counterpart in the Senate, Stephen Wise of Jacksonville, who has said he supports the programs.

"Every once in a while something happens," Wise said recently. "It happens in prisons. It happens in real life, too. It's a shame. We just have to make sure we try to fix it."

* * *

Jones is tortured by the thought of her son's final hours. The day she took him to the boot camp, his face looked as if he had been crying, she said.

She told him she had been crying, too.

It was okay to cry, she said, and promised they would see each other again soon.

[Last modified February 12, 2006, 00:27:07]
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Offline Anonymous

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Two 14yr-olds dead *Update*
« Reply #21 on: February 12, 2006, 11:02:00 AM »
St. Petersburg Times editorial on boot camp death.


http://www.sptimes.com/2006/02/11/Opini ... ideo.shtml

Release the video
Officials say a tape that shows the beating of a 14-year-old at a military-style boot camp is part of their investigation into the juvenile's death.
A Times Editorial
Published February 11, 2006

--------------------------------------------------

Two Florida lawmakers who viewed the video of a teenager being beaten by guards at a juvenile boot camp called the footage "horrific" and a clear use of "excessive force." Bay County Sheriff W. Frank McKeithen, who runs the boot camp for the state, took exception to those summaries of what preceded the death of Martin Lee Anderson, 14, calling the legislators "irresponsible" and "incorrect."

There is an easy way for the public to decide who is right: Release the video. Both Bay County officials and the Florida Department of Law Enforcement refuse, contending it is part of their investigation into Anderson's death and exempt from public records law.

It is not clear, however, what harm would be done to any future criminal case if the public is allowed to see what went on inside the Panama City facility.

Reps. Gus Barreiro, R-Miami Beach, and Dan Gelber, D-Miami Beach, described what they saw as they watched a slim 14-year-old boy being roughed up by several adults.

"(I've) never seen any kid being brutalized ... the way I saw this young man being brutalized," said Barreiro. "When you see stuff like that, you want to go through the TV and say, "Enough is enough. Please stop hitting this kid."'

Added Gelber: "I don't think there's any question there was excessive force. This is a relatively small kid with a half a dozen of pretty strong men, and he seemed to be phasing in and out of consciousness."

It was only Anderson's second day at the boot camp. After the beating, he complained of breathing problems and collapsed. A cause of death has not been released, although a preliminary report ruled out trauma or injury.

The use of military-style boot camps for juvenile offenders has come under increasing criticism. Those released from boot camps have a rearrest rate of 62 percent, hardly an argument for effectiveness. And this isn't the first abuse complaint. Two boys alleged they were choked at the same camp, but their complaints were ruled unfounded by the Sheriff's Office, which gets to investigate itself.

Barreiro has seen enough. "These programs are not working," he said. "We need to shut these things down."

Once Floridians see the video, they just might agree.
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Offline Anonymous

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Two 14yr-olds dead *Update*
« Reply #22 on: February 12, 2006, 12:44:00 PM »
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/13845105.htm

BOOT CAMP DEATH

Earlier cases fault guard

A guard being investigated in the death of a teen at a Panhandle boot camp once was suspended following a similar allegation.

BY CAROL MARBIN MILLER AND MARC CAPUTO [email protected]

PANAMA CITY - One of the seven guards under investigation in the death of a 14-year-old boy at a Panama City boot camp was suspended without pay in 2004 for failing to ''seek medical attention'' for a youth who accused him of smashing his face into the ground, bloodying his nose.

The officer, Patrick Tate Garrett, also was accused by a youth later that year of being among three guards who ''put their fingers into his throat so he couldn't breathe,'' according to a report that cleared Garrett and the others of any wrongdoing.

Yet another guard, Sgt. Henry Leslie Dickens, was part of a group that ''choked'' a boy during a restraint in March, according to a complaint from the youth that an investigation ruled was unfounded.

Both Garrett and Dickens are among seven officers at the Bay County Boot Camp under investigation by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement for Martin Lee Anderson's Jan. 6 death. Martin complained at least twice that he could not breathe during a series of controversial restraints at the camp the day before.

The events are detailed in a series of ''incident'' reports written by investigators of the Bay County Sheriff's Office. The Miami Herald obtained the records from the sheriff's office and the state Department of Juvenile Justice. Many of the records portray Garrett, Dickens and the other officers as stellar employees.

Martin, 14, of Panama City, was sent to the boot camp after police arrested him for joyriding in his grandmother's car during a Sunday church service. He was charged with grand theft.

On Jan. 5, Martin arrived at the military-style camp along with several other youths for initiation, which includes a program of strenuous exercise and discipline. Officers have said only that Martin had trouble breathing after guards restrained him for failing to cooperate with orders to perform more exercises.  Martin told the camp's nurse, Kristin Schmidt, ''he could not breathe'' following one of the ''use of force techniques'' officers used on him, but the nurse concluded that he ''appeared comfortable and in no respiratory distress,'' Schmidt told a Department of Juvenile Justice official the day Martin died.

LAST MOMENTS
Some of Martin's last moments at the camp were detailed in the report by the DJJ's chief medical director, Shairi R. Turner, in a Jan. 9 ''youth death report'' obtained by The Herald.
''His breathing was not felt to be labored and his respiratory rate had not changed,'' Turner wrote, quoting Schmidt.  Moments later, however, Martin told boot camp staff ''he could not see and he could not breathe,'' Turner quoted Schmidt as saying. ``He continued to make purposeful movements, then went limp.''  The report says it was almost 20 minutes between when the nurse first ''assessed'' the youth and called paramedics.

The report documented ``profuse bleeding from [Martin's] nose and mouth, requiring multiple units of blood and IV fluids.''
The medical examiner in Panama City has yet to release a cause of death.

Officials have said there was no sign of bruising on Martin's body, but two state lawmakers who viewed a videotape of the encounter have told The Miami Herald that it shows officers punching, kicking and choking the youth, and apparently pushing something up his nose -- identified by an investigator as an ammonia capsule, used to revive unconscious patients.

Martin's parents, who have been denied the right to see the tape, have hired a lawyer and say they fear a ``coverup.''

SUSPENDED
In the previous case implicating Garrett, he was ordered suspended on Aug. 6, 2004, for three days without pay for failing to report to his supervisors an incident that had occurred on July 30 of that year. He also was faulted for failing to request medical attention for the youth in the incident, and failing to use proper techniques for ``motivational physical training.''  In that case, a youth had complained he ''was having difficulty performing pushups when Sgt. Garrett pushed his head to the floor, causing his face to hit the floor and his nose to bleed,'' a report says.

In addition to the three-day suspension, Garrett was ordered to remain in a ''non-contact'' status with youths at the camp until he was retrained in procedures for ''reporting and requesting medical assistance for youths,'' the ''proper practice of approved physical training exercises'' for youths and reporting incidents up the chain of command.
''It is my duty to inform you that any further violations of this nature may result in more severe disciplinary action and/or termination . . .'' said a letter to Garrett written by a camp captain.  Yet Garrett's personnel file, also supplied by the sheriff's office, portrays a somewhat different officer.
His annual evaluation notes: ''Sgt. Garrett exhibits good control over offenders'' and that he can ``be counted on to work extra when details are needed.''  The man who prepared the report: Raymond Hauck, also implicated in Martin's case.

In a separate case, a youth said he was ''physically abused'' by Garrett and two other officers ''after he became non-resistant'' during an incident Oct. 30, 2004. The youth claimed that Garrett and the two others ''continued to put their fingers into his throat so he couldn't breathe'' after he no longer was resisting their use of force, according to a report, which cleared the officers of any wrongdoing.

PRESSURE APPLIED
Dickens, who also received high praise from supervisors, was involved in an incident Feb. 8, 2005, in which a youth claimed he and six drill instructors applied ''pressure to his Adam's apple'' and applied pressure to his throat ``until it began to cut off his air.''  'The staff yelled for the juvenile to say, `Sir, yes sir,' which the juvenile immediately did,'' said the report, which found no excessive force was used.
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Offline Anonymous

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Two 14yr-olds dead *Update*
« Reply #23 on: February 12, 2006, 02:48:00 PM »
Experts say counseling, not boot camps, prevent teen violence

LAURA MECKLER, Associated Press Writer

Friday, October 15, 2004
(10-15) 14:12 PDT WASHINGTON (AP) --

Boot camps and other "get tough" program for adolescents do not prevent criminal behavior, as intended, and may make the problem even worse, an expert panel concluded Friday.

Further, laws transferring juveniles into the adult court system lead these teens to commit more violence and at the same time, there is no proof they deter others from committing crime, the panel said.

More promising, it said, are programs that offer intensive counseling for families and young people at risk.

The 13-member panel of experts, convened by the National Institutes of Health, reviewed the available scientific evidence to look for consensus on causes of youth violence and ways to prevent it.

"'Scare tactics' don't work," the panel concluded in its report, released Friday. "Programs that seek to prevent violence through fear and tough treatment do not work."

Youth violence has declined from its peak a decade ago but violent crime rates are still high, the panel said.

Violence can be traced to a variety of troublesome conditions. Among possible causes: inconsistent or harsh parenting, poor peer relations, gang involvement, lack of connection to school and living in a violent neighborhood.

The trouble with boot camps, group detention centers and other "get tough" programs is they bring together young people who are inclined toward violence and teach each other how to commit more crime, the panel said: "The more sophisticated (teens) instruct the more naive in precisely the behaviors that the intervener wishes to prevent."

It also rejected programs that "consist largely of adults lecturing," like DARE.

One barrier to implementing effective programs, the report said, is resistance from people operating ineffective programs who depend on them for their jobs.

"All the evaluations have shown they don't work," said the panel's chair, Dr. Robert L. Johnson of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey. "Many communities are wasting a great deal of money on those types of programs."


The panel looked for programs that have been tested using rigorous research methods and concluded that "the good news is that there are a number of intervention programs that have been shown" effective.

The report cited two: a therapy program where youth and their families attend 12 one-hour sessions over three months, and a community-based clinical treatment program that targeted violent and chronic offenders at risk of being removed from their families. This second program provided about 60 hours of counseling over about four months with therapists available at all hours.

One key, Johnson said, was letting counselors observe families and children together and offer suggestions for better parenting.

Both programs reduced arrest rates and out-of-home placements, with positive effects four years after treatment ended.

The report identified six other programs that seemed to work but that hadn't been studied as closely, including Big Brothers Big Sisters, a nurse-family partnership program and Project Towards No Drug Abuse.

Successful programs share a variety of characteristics, the panel said. Among them: treatments last a year or longer, intensive clinical work with those at risk is included, they take place outside schools and other institutional settings.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
On the Net:
National Institutes of Health consensus conferences:

consensus.nih.gov/
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Offline Anonymous

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Two 14yr-olds dead *Update*
« Reply #24 on: February 13, 2006, 11:26:00 AM »
It's gone international!!!  Kathy has an article from Ireland on ?her site and here's a new one from The Guardian, UK.?



Fla. Video Said to Show Boot Camp Beating

Thursday February 9, 2006 10:16 PM


By BRENT KALLESTAD

Associated Press Writer

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) - A videotape shows guards brutally beating a boy at a military-style boot camp for juvenile delinquents not long before the teenager died, two lawmakers said Thursday.

Martin Lee Anderson, 14, died Jan. 6 at a Pensacola hospital, a day after he entered the camp because of an arrest for theft.

Anderson complained of breathing difficulties and collapsed during exercises that were part of the entry process at the camp, which was run by the Bay County Sheriff's Office.

Authorities have said he had to be restrained when he became uncooperative during the workout.

State Rep. Gus Barreiro, a Republican, called the videotape ``horrific,'' saying he had ``never seen any kid being brutalized ... the way I saw this young man being brutalized.''

``Even towards the end of the videotape, where you could just see there was pretty much nothing left of Martin, they came out with a couple cups of water and splashed him in the face,'' he said. ``When you see stuff like that, you want to go through the TV and say, 'Enough is enough. Please stop hitting this kid.'''

Bay County authorities and the Florida Department of Law Enforcement have refused to make the tape public, but Barreiro and state Rep. Dan Gelber, a Democrat who also viewed the videotape, said it would be released soon.

``I don't think there's any question there was excessive force,'' Gelber said. ``This is a relatively small kid with a half a dozen of pretty strong men, and he seemed to be phasing in and out of consciousness.''

Sheriff Frank McKeithen issued a statement accusing Barreiro and Gelber of overreacting with ``irresponsible, premature and incorrect statements'' that ``add fuel to an already volatile situation.''

The contents of the tape were first reported by The Miami Herald.

Gov. Jeb Bush, who was in Orlando, said that although he had not seen the tape, several of his aides had and he was aware of the contents. ``Absolutely we're concerned,'' he said.

Anderson's family said it plans to sue Bay County and the state Department of Juvenile Justice, which oversees boot camp programs. The department gave the camp a good review in June 2004.
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Offline Nihilanthic

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Two 14yr-olds dead *Update*
« Reply #25 on: February 13, 2006, 07:08:00 PM »
Quote
Dickens, who also received high praise from supervisors, was involved in an incident Feb. 8, 2005, in which a youth claimed he and six drill instructors applied ''pressure to his Adam's apple'' and applied pressure to his throat ``until it began to cut off his air.'' 'The staff yelled for the juvenile to say, `Sir, yes sir,' which the juvenile immediately did,'' said the report, which found no excessive force was used.


Lovely.

Whats sad? Thats a-okay with a lot of america! Nobody sees the problem with basically beating kids down into submission, and the fear and humiliation that goes with it, and combining that with day-long forced exercise for a long period of time.

Anyone ever compared a bootcamp model with the brainwashing model? http://www.ex-cult.org/bite.html <- look for yourselves.

But, well, "bootcamp" is such a part of our society now, that we will never be rid of it, just have people reason that bootcamp brainwashing is a necessary evil.

It might be for the military, but its not ok for kids - and they dont do that shit in the military to ADULTS, but we're this brutal to CHILDREN? WTF?

WHEN SPIDERS UNITE, THEY CAN TIE DOWN A LION  
-- Ethiopian Proverb

« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
DannyB on the internet:I CALLED A LAWYER TODAY TO SEE IF I COULD SUE YOUR ASSES FOR DOING THIS BUT THAT WAS NOT POSSIBLE.

CCMGirl on program restraints: "DON\'T TAZ ME BRO!!!!!"

TheWho on program survivors: "From where I sit I see all the anit-program[sic] people doing all the complaining and crying."

Offline Anonymous

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Two 14yr-olds dead *Update*
« Reply #26 on: February 14, 2006, 10:36:00 AM »
Miami Herald, CNN, sue FDLE over video in boot camp death



MIAMI (AP) -- The Miami Herald and CNN sued the Florida Department of Law Enforcement Monday to obtain the release of a videotape that allegedly shows guards beating a 14-year-old boy at a military-style boot camp before he died.

The state has so far refused to release the tape to the public.

Martin Lee Anderson, 14, of Panama City, died Jan. 6 after collapsing at the camp operated by the Bay County Sheriff's Office. He had complained of breathing problems while doing exercises as part of the camp's admitting procedures. The sheriff's office has said officers restrained Anderson after he became uncooperative.

"We want the tape. The public has a right to the tape and it's unconscionable for that tape to be withheld from public view," Miami Herald attorney Robert G. Beatty said.
 
The suit was filed late Monday afternoon in state court in Tallahassee, after the newspaper and CNN had made several attempts to obtain the video and were repeatedly refused, Beatty said.

"To my knowledge, as of now, FDLE has not been served. If we are, we will not comment on any pending litigation that FDLE is involved in," FDLE spokeswoman Kristen Perezluha said.

Perezluha added that the FDLE has been involved in discussions about possible release of the tape, but no decision has been made. The state agency also has an active investigation of the boot camp death and does not want to violate its protocol for investigations, Perezluha said.

Legislators who have seen the videotape have described its content as brutal, and a display of excessive force.

State Rep. Gus Barreiro, R-Miami Beach, called the beating Anderson received horrific, and that the youth had been brutalized.

"I don't think there's any question there was excessive force," Rep. Dan Gelber, a Democrat from Miami Beach and former federal prosecutor said after seeing the tape.

Bay County Sheriff Frank McKeithen said earlier in a statement the legislators' comments were irresponsible and incorrect.

Anderson's parents, Gina Jones and Robert Anderson, said they had not been allowed to see their son's last conscious moments. The family's attorney, Ben Crump, has demanded the tape's release.

Beatty said a verbal and written request to obtain the tape were made last week and on Monday.

Miami attorney Sandy Bohrer of the law firm Holland & Knight will represent both the Herald and CNN in the litigation, Beatty said.
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Offline Anonymous

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Two 14yr-olds dead *Update*
« Reply #27 on: February 14, 2006, 11:52:00 PM »
let's see, do you have all of the facts? Do you know if the kid had any undetected medical conditions before going to the camp? Do you know if the toxicology tests revealed he had taken any drugs, especially narcotics, prior to going to the camp?

Have you seen the video? Have you talked to witnesses?

Yes, it is a tragedy. Was it the fault of the guards? Maybe, maybe not. We just do not know yet.

HOWEVER, what you fail to mention and the public and news media fail to mention is that these are not little angels that are at these bootcamps. These are kids who are travelling down the wrong path, committing serious felonies and have burgeoning criminal careers ahead of them. They are heading toward a life of going into and getting out of prison. The boot camps have a better success rate considering recidivism than simple incarceration.

Getting back to this case, until you have all the facts, if you make a decision than YOU are an idiot.
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Offline Helena Handbasket

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Two 14yr-olds dead *Update*
« Reply #28 on: February 15, 2006, 03:25:00 AM »
Quote
On 2006-02-14 20:52:00, Anonymous wrote:

"let's see, do you have all of the facts? Do you know if the kid had any undetected medical conditions before going to the camp? Do you know if the toxicology tests revealed he had taken any drugs, especially narcotics, prior to going to the camp?



Have you seen the video? Have you talked to witnesses?



Yes, it is a tragedy. Was it the fault of the guards? Maybe, maybe not. We just do not know yet.



HOWEVER, what you fail to mention and the public and news media fail to mention is that these are not little angels that are at these bootcamps. These are kids who are travelling down the wrong path, committing serious felonies and have burgeoning criminal careers ahead of them. They are heading toward a life of going into and getting out of prison. The boot camps have a better success rate considering recidivism than simple incarceration.



Getting back to this case, until you have all the facts, if you make a decision than YOU are an idiot."


Soooooooo, maybe watching the video would might be considered "fact finding", wouldn't it?

Were the power of Congress to be established in the latitude contended for, it would subvert the very foundation, and transmute the very nature of the limited Government established by the people of America.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0813912652/circlofmiamithem' target='_new'> James Madison

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uly 21, 2003 - September 17, 2006

Offline Anonymous

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Two 14yr-olds dead *Update*
« Reply #29 on: February 15, 2006, 07:54:00 AM »
Heart Failure was cause of death.
They beat him.
They choked him.
He died.
His heart stopped beating.
He died of Heart Failure.
Happens ALL THE TIME in the prison system.
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